Gibson v. Love

4 Fla. 217 | Fla. | 1851

ANDERSON, Chief Justice,

delivered the opinion of the Court, as follows:

This is a case of a claim to personal property interposed according to the provisions of our statute of February 17th, 1833.

The facts material to the point presented to this Court are briefly these : James Gibson and Daniel Love, the parties to this suit, on the thirteenth of April, 1839, became sureties on a bond given by one John C. Love, as executor of John Colson, deceased. On the thirteenth of December, 1841, John C. Love having become indebted to the estate of his testator and some fear being entertained that he might become a defaulter, a deed of mortgage was executed by the said Love to Gibson, conveying to him several negroes and, amongst them, one by the name of Henry, the subject of the present controversy. The object of the mortgage was to save harmless the said Gibson, on account of any loss which he might sustain, as surety on the bond before mentioned. Most of the property thus mortgaged was subject to a prior lien of the# Union Bank. This mortgage was duly proved by a subscribing witness, and recorded on the *228seventeenth day of December, 1841, four days subsequent to its date.

On the first day of January, 1842, John C. Love acknowledged before the clerk of the Circuit Court the execution of a paper writing in these words :

“ Territory of Florida — Gadsden County r

Received of Daniel Love one thousand dollars in payment for a negro-man, Henry, twenty-four years of age, a slave for life, which negro, Henry, I do warrant to the said Daniel Love, his heirs and assigns, forever, to be good property forever.

Witness my hand and seal this ninth December, 1841.

[Signed,] JOHN C. LOVE, [Seal.]”

On the day of its acknowledgement, (that is, January 1st, 1842,) this paper writing was recorded by the clerk. On the subsequent trial of the right of property, Samuel B. Love, a witness, stated “that about the time of making the bill of sale, John C. Love was somewhat embarrassed in his pecuniary affairs, and that he (John C. Love) was indebted to the claimant, Daniel Love, but to what amount he could not say. That about the time of making the bill of sale, he (witness) heard Daniel Love tell John C. Love, that he (John C. Love) might keep possession of the negro-man, Henry, for two or three years, if he (John C. Love) would pay him the interest on the price of the negro, Henry. That John C. Love not paying the interest, Daniel Love took possession of the negro, Henry, about January, 1843.

Another witness, Alexander Love, stated that the amount of the indebtedness of John C. Love to Daniel Love was about one thousand dollars. Another witness, Isaac R. Harris, stated that, at some subsequent time, though the date is not mentioned, “ when it was ascertained that John C. Love was indebted to the estate of Colson he, (witness) and the other legatees of the estate of Colson had a meeting with Daniel Love and James- Gibson, as securities of John O. Love, to see whether or not a settlement could not 'be *229had between the legatees and the securities ; the legatees proposing to take Daniel Love’s note for one-half and James Gibson’s note for the other half of the amount due from John O. Love to the estate of Colson. That Daniel Love refused to settle, unless James Gibson would let him (Daniel Love) share in the benefit of the mortgage ; which Gibson refused, saying that he (Gibson) had frequently applied to him (Daniel Love) to assist him (James Gibson) in obtaining the mortgage security from John C. Love, and that he (Daniel Love) had refused to do so.”

Subsequently John C. Love became in arrears to the estate of Colson, and on the 29th of November, 1845, judgment for $2,792 82-100 was recovered against Gibson on account of his surety-ship, and that amount was paid by him in full.

On the 13th of November, 1847, a bill previously filed by Gibson, praying a foreclosure of the mortgage, was taken as confessed as to John C. Love, and on the 31st of December, 1849, the decree was made absolute, and it was ordered that the master in Chancery should take possession of the slave Henry and sell him to satisfy the claim of the complainant, Gibson. Under this decree the master proceeded forthwith to take possession of the slave Henry, who, when levied on by him was in the possession of the claimant, Daniel Love, who thereupon, on the 4th of January, 1850, commenced proceedings for interposing his claim, by-filing the affidavit required by law and executing his bond.

The, case came on to be tried on the 24th of May, 1850, and after the evidence was heard the plaintiff in execution prayed the following instructions, to wit:

1st. That if the jury believe from the evidence that the property in controversy was in the possession of John C, Love at the date of the execution of the mortgage, and that the mortgage was recorded prior to the time that the property passed into the possession of Daniel Love, the claimant under the bill of sale, then the law is for the plaintiff in execution, and they will find the property subject.

*2302d. That if they believe that the contract between John C. Love and Daniel Love was calculated to deceive the plaintiff in execution, then the jury shall find the property subject to the execution.

3d. That when the bill of sale is absolute on the face, and the possession does not accompany the bill of sale, the contract is fraudulent per se.

Which instructions the Court refused to give, but gave to the jury the following, as prayed by the claimant, viz :

1st. If the jury believe that the plaintiff purchased the slave Henry, in good faith, for a valuable consideration, and arranged with the vendor that he might retain possession of the slave upon hire and, from the circumstances, that there was no fraud in fact in the transaction, the claimant is entitled to recover.

2d. That, although possession of personal property, if it continues in the possession of the vendor after a sale, is prima facie evidence of the transaction being colorable and fictitious, yet that such possession continuing in the vendor may be explained by the circumstances; and if the jury believe that, under the circumstances in this case, there was no fraud in fact, then the bill of sale of the 9th December, conveys a title to Daniel Love.

3d. That if the jury believe that the hiring of this slave was real and bona fide, and not fictitious and colorable, the possession of John C. Love was consistent with the bill of sale, being in law the possession of Daniel Love.

4th. That if the sale to Daniel Love was not fictitious or fraudulent, the possession continuing in John C. Love under an arrangement for hire cannot be complained of by a creditor, unless a new credit be given or an old one extended, under a mistaken belief that the property remained unsold.

Under these instructions the jury found the property to be in the claimant, Daniel Love, whereupon the plaintiff in execution, having by his counsel filed his bill of exceptions setting out the foregoing facts, refusal and charge, prayed an appeal to this Court.

*231The assignment of errors is in the following words :

1st. The Court erred in refusing to instruct the jury as prayed for by the appellant.

2d. The Court erred in instructing the jury as prayed for by the appellee.

The two sets of instructions prayed for by the respective parties are somewhat in artificially drawn up, owing, doubtless, to the'haste incident to a jury trial at nisi prius. No one of the instructions, taken singly, presents very distinctly the difficult questions which grow out of this class of cases; but, taken as a whole, they may be regarded as asserting on the one side that the question of fraud is a question of law, to be decided necessarily and by legal inference from certain facts ; and, on the other, that it is a question of fact, to be determined by the jury according as they may or may not believe, from the evidence, that there was an actual design to cheat. As so intended and understood, we shall proceed to consider them.

It may tend to the better understanding of this distinction, if we remark in the outset, that, by the ancient common law, the question of fraud was purely a question of fact, involving an actual fraudulent intention, and the proper inquiry, therefore, will be, whether there is such a thing as statutory fraud, as contra-distinguished from actual fraud.

The first point to be ascertained is, the relation in which Gibson stands to John C. Love — whether he is a creditor or purchaser, or both ?

It is maintained by the counsel for the appellee, that “the fact that he was surety on the executor’s bond, did not make him a creditor of his principal.” Perhaps in the strict technical meaning of the term he cannot be called a creditor. But it will be recollected that the statute of 13th Elizabeth protects creditors and others from fraudulent conveyances, and a liberal construction of this statute in favor of the class of persons designed to be protected from fraud, has *232always been admitted by the courts. “ As to rights from “ contracts, any one liable upon a contract, express or im- “ plied, though only contingently, is a debtor from the time “ the liability is entered into ; accordingly, a surety is a “ creditor of the co-obligor from the time the obligation is en- “ tered into; (Howe v. Ward, 4th Greenleaf, 195;) and those “ interested in an official bond are creditors of the surety “ from the time that the bond is executed by him. 1st American Leading Cases, 55. So “ a guarantee is to be deemed a creditor to the guarantor, on a covenant of guaranty, even before it is ‘broken.” 8th Cowen, 407. And Gibson having made himself a debtor, on account of his liability for Love, is, by the same rule, a creditor of Love.

So, also, in Twyne’s case, 3d Coke, 80, it is said, “because fraud and deceit abound in these days more than in former times, it was resolved in this case by the whole Court, that all statutes made against fraud should be liberally and beneficially expounded to suppress the fraud;” and an instance is given in the case of Pauncefoot v. Blunt, where it was held that the statute embraced the case of a forfeiture incurred to the Queen, and “ it was resolved by alHhe barons that the statute of 13th Elizabeth, chapter 5, extends to it; for thereby it is enacted and declared that all feofments, gifts, grants, &c., to delay, hinder and defraud creditors and others of their just and lawful actions, suits, debts, accounts, damages, forfeitures, heriots, mortuaries and reliefs, shall be void, &c. So that this act doth not extend only to creditors, hut to all others who have cause of action or suit, or any penalty or forfeiture,” fyc.

We must regard, then, Gibson as entitled to all the protection which this statute of 13th Elizabeth designs to extend t° creditors and others, against fraudulent conveyances contrived to delay, hinder or defraud them of their just and lawful actions, &c. Upon this point, also, the counsel for the appellee says : “ I know of no case, where a creditor of a vendor obtaining judgment and execution after the ven*233dee got into possession, has complained of the previous want of possession in the vendee, or previous actual possession of the vendor.”

The case of Edwards v. Harben, 2d Term Reports, 587, to which all the courts both in this country and in England refer as a leading case, was that of a simple contract creditor, who had obtained neither execution nor judgment before the possession of the vendee commenced; and yet the Court held in his behalf, that the sale of chattels made by the indebted vendor, under an agreement to retain possession for fourteen days, was fraudulent and, therefore, void. The counsel for appellee seems to admit that Gibson was a purchaser, but adds “ that purchasers are not included within the letter or spirit of either 13th Elizabeth or 21st James.”

A sufficient reply has been given to this objection by the authorities already quoted; but we think further, that the statute of 27th Elizabeth, though its terms apply only to land, yet being but declaratory of the common law, may be interpreted as defining the nature and effect of fraudulent conveyances generally — in its letter, re-enacting the common law as to fraud relating to land, but in its spirit, sanctioning and sustaining the condemnation passed by the common law upon all frauds. In Hudnal v. Wilder, 4th McCord, 295, it was held, “ that, upon common law principles, a fraudulent conveyance of chattels might be avoided by a subsequent bona fide purchaser for a valuable consideration, without notice.”

Gibson stands unquestionably in the relation of a purchaser, by virtue of the mortgage of 13th December, 1841. “ A mortgagee is a purchaser to the extent of his interest in the premises, within the meaning of the term purchaser, as used in the statute of frauds.” Ledyard v. Butler, 9th Paige, 137, and authorities quoted in the margin.]

We must, however, regard him as a subsequent purchaser ; for though there is no proof on the record that the bill *234of sale from John C. Love to Daniel Love was executed before the 1st of January, 1842, which was subsequent to the recording of the mortgage, yet we are concluded by the verdict of the jury to take it to have been in fact made before the date of the mortgage.

For the reasons given, we shall regard Gibson as both creditor and subsequent purchaser, entitled to the protection of the statute of 13th Elizabeth in both these relations,, by virtue of the phrase “ creditors and others and also entitled as purchaser to the beiiefits of the common law provisions against fraudulent conveyances, as explained and defined in 27th Elizabeth, which was enacted in more direct reference to fraudulent conveyances of land.

In the case before us, the Court instructed the jury substantially that, unless satisfied from the facts developed by the evidence, that in the sale of the slave Henry by John C. Love to Daniel Love, there was an actual, positive design to commit a. fraud, they must find for the claimant.— This instruction we consider erroneous in this — that it was not qualified, by further instructing the jury that the policy of the law, sanctioned by authority, regarded certain facts as such unerring indicia of fraud, that the inferential evidence afforded by them was of as high a character as direct proof. So conclusive, indeed, is the nature of this evidence in some cases, that it not only supplies the omission of direct proof of fraud, but it is so stringent in its character as not to be rebutted by direct proof of the absence of any fraudulent design. For instance, if a man largely indebted makes, a voluntary conveyance of all his property, no one doubts that the conveyance is fraudulent in law, and void as to creditors, and yet it is possible that the grantor had no actual design to cheat, and the jury might so believe. It might be the grantor was in the receipt of an income from his trade, or his profession, or his business, which he deemed sufficient to enable him to pay his debts, and that, in the sanguine anticipation of the continuance of this in*235come, he calculated surely and honorably to satisfy all his creditors ; but in spite of this honest intent, however fully ■believed by the jury, there is no court but would instruct the jury that it was their duty to And the conveyance fraudulent. It would be fraudulent in law necessarily and independently of the actual intent of the grantor.

Though the case supposed is an extreme one, it is sufficient to show that what is termed fraud in law is distinct from fraud in fact, and that it, is the duty of the judge to instruct the jury that their conclusions from facts must be regulated by the character and import given to those facts by necessary legal implication.

But we do not design to be understood as saying that generally, or even very often, does the law give to certain facts the eiFect of overruling and contradicting conclusions arising from other facts, as in the case supposed. It more generally gives to those certain facts a legal implication, to aid the jury in detecting the existence of an actual fraud, when its more direct and obvious manifestations may be successfully concealed. Fraud is, in its nature, secret, and the law, in its wise abhorrence of all false dealing, lends its aid to the jury through the court, to enable them to detect and expose the deception. Hence it is that it regards some acts as proofs of fraudulent intent, and it is the duty of the courts so to instruct the jury. It is not a sufficient answer to this to say, that in the case before us the judge instructed the jury, according to the second instruction asked, that the possession of personal property, if it continues in. the possession of the vendor after a sale, is prima facie evidence of the transaction being colorable and fictitious; but that the possession maybe explained by circumstances. He should have gone on to characterize those circumstances as sufficient to explain the possession — as for instance, that the sickness of the slave Henry made his delivery impossible, or that there was something else to repel the presumption of fraud arising from the detention of the slave after the *236sale. Instead of doing this, and maintaining the force and integrity of these legal presumptions, the jury are directed in the further instructions of the Judge to abandon all legal presumptions, and go into an inquiry as to fraud, as proved or not proved directly by facts.

So necessary is it to maintain the distinction between fraud in law and fraud in fact, that even in the State of New York, where the vexed questions growing out of this distinction were attempted to be settled by the enactment of a statute, declaring that “ in all cases arising under the statute against fraudulent conveyances as respects creditors, the question of fraudulent intent shall be a question of fact and not of law,” the courts have found it necessary still to maintain the distinction.

In the case of Cunningham v. Freeborn, 3d Paige’s Reports, 557, the Chancellor said : As this cause was heard on bill and answer only, the denial of all fraud in the execution of the assignment is conclusive evidence of the fact, in favor of the defendants, unless that allegation is inconsistent with or contradicted by some other statement or admission in the answer. But the Vice Chancellor was correct in supposing that the general denial of fraud was not sufficient, if it appeared upon the face of the assignment that its legal effect would be to delay, hinder and defraud the complainant and other creditors of the assignor. The Revised Statutes have not made the fraud itself a question of fact in all cases, neither indeed was it possible for the Legislature to do so; for when a party has intentionally executed an assignment or conveyance of his property, which must hinder and defraud his creditors of their just demands, the question whether the conveyance is fraudulent or not, necessarily becomes a question of law and not of fact.” See, also, 11th Wendell, 241, and 6th Hill, 433.

“ So with respect to libels, where the fact of publication is incontestable, if the paper, which is the subject of indictment or information, has upon the face of it a natural and *237obvious tendency to promote sedition, it is no subject of inquiry by evidence whether the party had actually such intention in his mind or not. What passes in the mind of man is not scrutable by a human tribunal — it is only to be found out by his acts. Every man of sufficient understanding is to be responsible for his actions — he is supposed to be cognizant of the law as the rule by which every man is to be governed, and, therefore, it is his business to know it. If, therefore, a man publishes what the law says is treasonable, seditious or libellous, the intent with which he does it is mere matter of legal inference from the fact of publication, and is not the subject of proof either one way or the other.” Mr. Justice Ashurst’s judgment, Rex v. Dean of St. Asaph, 3d Term Reports, 428.

In the case now before us the Court should have instrucr ted the jury that, in the absence of positive proof of a fraudulent intent on the part of Love, they should infer it from his having retained possession of the slave after selling him absolutely, unless there was some evidence not of a general character negativing a fraudulent intent, but of a character to explain this possession which the law regards as a badge of fraud — as that the slave was too sick to be removed, or that, for the convenience of the grantee, John C. Love had kept him for a short time. The possession of the slave by the grantor for two years after the absolute sale, and for his own convenience, gives to the mere possession the force of more than mere prima facie evidence. So potent is the effect of presumptions of this character that, by the operation of the statute of frauds they must prevail, as we have already intimated, to establish a fraud, even where the jury are satisfied that there was no actual fraudulent intent — much more when there is a mere absence of proof" of actual fraud. In the case of Salmon and Bennet, 1 Connecticut Reports, 505, the Chief Justice says “though there “ he no fraudulent intent, yet if the grantor was considerably indebted and embarrassed at the time and on the eve *238“ of bankruptcy, then such conveyance will be void as to “ creditors.” The fraud thus established is sometimes and •appropriately called statutory fraud, and this term implies that there may be a species of fraud, sufficient to avoid a •conveyance, distinct and different from the moral, actual ■fraud ini o which the jury in this case were directed to inquire. It is the absence of all recognition of this species of fraud, in the instructions given in this case, that makes them erroneous.

The cases in the books which illustrate and enforce these views are very numerous and of very high authority, but they are so familiar to the profession that we shall refer only to a few of them. Twyne’s case, reported in 3 Coke, 80, is the most celebrated of these, and in the commentaries on that case, in Smith’s Leading Oases, by both the English and American editors, we find all the most important authorities arranged and digested, and the principles involved very clearly and learnedly discussed. The weight of the authorities is very decidedly in favor of the general principle that, in the sale of chattels, unless possession follows and accompanies the deed, it is fraudulent and void as to creditors.

In Edwards v. Harben, 2 Term Reports, 587, one Mercer executed a bill of sale to Harben, to whom he was indebted, of all his household furniture and effects, by way of security for his debt, with a parol agreement that if the debt were not paid within fourteen days, Harben might enter upon the effects and sell them at the end of that time.— Mercer, retaining possession, died eleven days thereafter, and on the next day Harben took possession of the effects and sold them. Edwards, another creditor of Mercer, brought suit against Harben, as executor de son tori of Mercer, and the question for the Court ivas, whether the defendant be entitled to retain the proceeds of the effects, or whether the bill of sale was void as against the creditors of Mercer. It was held that Harben was liable to be sued as executor *239de son tori, for the debts of the deceased ; for, says Justice Buller, “Unless possession accompanies and follows the “ deed it is fraudulent and void. ' This case has been ar- “ gued by the defendant’s counsel as being a case in which “ the want of possession is only evidence of fraud, and that “ it was not such a circumstance, j)er se, as makes the trans- “ action fraudulent in law. That is the point which we have “ considered, anti we are all of opinion that if there is noth- “ ing but the absolute conveyance without the possession, “ that in point of law is fraudulent.”

After the English rule on this subject had been thus discussed, declared and settled, it was repeatedly held that an absolute bill of sale of chattels, unaccompanied with possession, was fraudulent at law and void as against creditors. 2 Kent, 518.

In the Supreme Court of the United States the rule laid down in Edwards v. Harben has been approved and adopted, and it is declared that an absolute bill of sale is itself a fraud in law, unless possession accompanies and follows the deed. See Hamilton v. Russell, 1 Cranch, 309. “ Modern “ decisions,” says Chief Justice Marshall in that ease, “ have- “ taken this question up upon principle, and have deter- “ mined that an unconditional sale, where the possession “ does not accompany and follow the deed is, with respect to “ creditors, on the sound construction of the statute of Eliz- “ abeth, a fraud, and should be so determined by the Cozirt.” “ We think that the intent of the statute is best promoted “ by that construction, and that fraudulent conveyances- “ which are made to secure to a debtor a beneficial interest “ while his property is protected from creditors, will be most “ effectually prevented by declaring that an absolute bill of “ sale is itself a fraud, unless possession accompanies and “ follows the deed.”

All the Federal Courts have followed the construction here laid down by the Chief Justice. In Virginia the same principle has been directly and repeatedly adjudged to be-*240well settled. Alexander v. Deneale, 2 Munford, 341. Robertson v. Ewell, 3 Munford, 1. Land v. Jeffries, 5 Randolph, 211. In this latter case the real purpose and extent of the explanations allowed to be made to the jury to rebut the presumptive'evidence arising from possession after an absolute sale, and the proper understanding of which will reconcile many apparently contradictory authorities on this point, are well defined. It was held “ that when the grantor “ of personal property remains in possession after an abso- lute conveyance, the conveyance is prima facie fraudulent; but such possession is not conclusive evidence of fraud, “ barring every explanation. It will lay with the purchaser “ to explain and rebut the presumption of fraud — as if the ■“ the slave be purchased and not taken away for seven “ months it may be shown that he was too sick to be removed.” The explanation must relate to the possession. If that is unexplained, it is conclusive evidence of a fraudulent intent.

The States of New-York, (before the revised statutes,) Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, South Carolina, New-Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Connecticut and Vermont recognize the rule as laid down in Hamilton v. Russell, as to absolute bills of sale, though differing among themselves on the subject of mortgages.

In New-Hampshire the distinction to which we have referred as made in the case of Land v. Jeffries is fully adopted. “ When conveyances by one in debt are impeached, “ the question is, was there a secret trust ? and in absolute “ sales possession is prima facie evidence of it, and if unexplained, conclusive.” Parker v. Pattee, 4 New-Hampshire Reports, 176.

The South Carolina cases make a distinction where the purchaser is a creditor of the grantor, as is the relation of the parties in the case before us. Adopting the rule just referred to as prevailing in New-Hampshire, in the case of an absolute sale for a price paid, it was held that “ where *241“ a pre-existing debt is the consideration, or a part of it, retention of possession and nse is conclusive and intraversa- “ ble evidence of fraud.” 1 Smith’s Leading Cases, 49, and authorities referred to.

In Connecticut the true rule, as understood by this Court, is well laid down in the case of Osborne v. Fuller, 14 Connecticut Reports, 530. There all the cases were reviewed, the old principle is maintained, and the result of these decisions appears to be, “ that the rule is one of policy, but not “ of intention ; that it is not enough that the jury find that “ the sale was bona fide and for a good consideration, though “ evidence of that is proper to be submitted to the jury to repel actual fraud; there must be some reason for the re- “ tention, legally sufficient and satisfactory. The presump- tion of fraud is a presumption of law, and the law judges “ of the cases in which it does not arise, and the jury are to “ be instructed by-the Court as to the sufficiency and reasons “ alleged to justify the retention.”

In Maryland an early statute has relieved the courts of all difficulty upon this vexed question ; but in Massachusetts and Maine and Ohio and Tennessee, North Carolina and Alabama, the courts have, to a greater or less extent, broken down the rule as established in England and in the Federal courts, to which we have referred. ' But this Court can see nothing in the reasonings by which the relaxation of the rule is attempted to be justified in the reports of those States, to shake their conviction that the other rule is more consonant with the objects of the statute and with the reason and policy of the law.

We conclude, then, by saying that we think the Court below, on the trial of this case, erred in instructing the jury that the question of fraud upon which they were to pass was a question of mere intention. ^ The retention of personal chattels, after a sale, is prima facie evidence of fraud, and the appropriate evidence to rebut the presumption is not the proof of the general good faith of the grantor, but *242an explanation of the retention, to show either that it is consistent with the deed or is unavoidable, as in the case of a ship at sea, or is temporary, for the reasonable convenience of the granteeT}

In reviewing the decisions of the other States we have not adverted to the diversity of opinion which exists in reference to delivery of possession of chattels which are mortgaged. We have a statute which requires all such mortgages to be recorded, and the notice thus given to the world is a negation of the fraudulent intent which the law infers from retention of possession after an absolute sale.

This case must be sent back for a new trial, and the Judge of the Circuit Court will instruct the jury according to the rule set forth in this opinion.

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